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#983019 - 12/30/17 09:26 PM Ban Downriggers?
BillSteve Offline
Fry

Registered: 10/25/17
Posts: 26
Loc: Port Ludlow, WA
Hi All,

I've been fishing in PS since 2011 and have really enjoyed it. I've also really benefited from reading this forum to learn more about the life cycle of salmon and the politics and management surrounding it. The depth of knowledge here is impressive.

Like the rest of you I'm concerned about where the fisheries in WA are headed. This last year had relatively short salmon seasons and I understand this year will likely be worse.

I was thinking back on when MA 9 was only open to shore fishing. Now I troll with downriggers almost all of the time, though when I first got my boat I mooched, with less but not zero success. I wonder, what about just banning downriggers? Would this allow an extended season? I've never felt it was the most noble form of fishing, getting in line with everyone else. It is productive, obviously and maybe that's part of the problem. Maybe at this point if you want the privilege of fishing for salmon you should have to really learn how to target them. I for one would have no problem with this. I am there to be on the water and learn about the fish and their habitat. I would be happy to catch less fish and when I do consider it a luxury if it meant preserving the fishery. If you want to fish then really learn how to do it. Thoughts?

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#983021 - 12/31/17 07:00 AM Re: Ban Downriggers? [Re: BillSteve]
bob r Offline
Returning Adult

Registered: 04/17/13
Posts: 289
Maybe we should ban hooks next, if you really want to hinder the ability to fish, maybe some of us who only "fish for fun " and don't eat fish should stay off the waters. After all, shouldn't we not "play with our food"? What other wild ideas are next? I can't wait to see! Bob R

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#983023 - 12/31/17 07:35 AM Re: Ban Downriggers? [Re: BillSteve]
Great Bender Offline
Juvenile at Sea

Registered: 01/03/17
Posts: 155
Loc: Hood Canal
I'm siding with Bob and thousands of other stakeholders on this one. All that reg would do is widen the gap between our legal gear and legal Tribal gill nets...

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#983025 - 12/31/17 08:06 AM Re: Ban Downriggers? [Re: BillSteve]
FleaFlickr02 Offline
River Nutrients

Registered: 10/28/09
Posts: 3314
As an only occasional salt angler, I've developed a sense that you only need downriggers to catch kings more consistently. 8-16 oz. balls get it done in a lot of the same fisheries, especially for coho. Looks like there's not going to be a lot of kings to be caught (or even legal to target) in Puget Sound for a while.

I almost dislike fishing with downriggers. That said, it seems the best answer to how to catch migrating fish at the bottom of 250 feet of water, and it's better than not fishing, so when in Rome....

As someone who is usually confined to rivers (and likes that just fine), I am all about angling for fish. The pursuit sits high on the list of what I love about fishing.

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#983026 - 12/31/17 08:18 AM Re: Ban Downriggers? [Re: BillSteve]
Carcassman Offline
River Nutrients

Registered: 11/21/07
Posts: 7428
Loc: Olema,California,Planet Earth
It is a good discussion to have. What is the goal of a fishery? Dead fishing the boat? Limits? Time on the water?

Ban down riggers and you will reduce individual success. Make season longer. This may push out the angler who has a limited number of days to fish. But, it will extend the fishery for those who can participate. It would also (probably) benefit the good moocher at the expense of someone who just can't catch fish that way.

The value of a recreational fishery, from a management perspective, is participation/days on the water. A commercial fishery goal is to harvest their fish in the shortest amount of time as that is the economically best way to go.

So, I think this is a good discussion, realizing that whatever is done will hurt one group or theater. I am kinda like Flea, I would much rather fish freshwater walk and wade. Really don't care a lot for boats and fishing in salt has never been great fun so salt fishing for salmon could be completely closed and I wouldn't mind. Ecologically it's much better, too, but that's another argument. But, I recognize that without saltwater fishing there is a lot of people who would not be able to access salmon. a lot of folks who believe that a salmon has to be chrome silver to be edible, and so on.

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#983028 - 12/31/17 08:50 AM Re: Ban Downriggers? [Re: BillSteve]
FleaFlickr02 Offline
River Nutrients

Registered: 10/28/09
Posts: 3314
A river angler in the know can catch salmon that are plenty chromey... And bigger than they would have been a month before in the salt. Of course, you knew that, but I felt inclined to add it, since you teed it up so nicely.

Before anyone says it, okay, I admit it. Salt fresh salmon (especially chinook) is as good as salmon gets from a food perspective. Really fresh river fish are very close to the same quality, but they can be inconsistent. For the record, I'd give up eating salmon today if I knew it meant I could still fish for them tomorrow, and that thinking dominates my "how it should be" scenarios.

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#983030 - 12/31/17 08:57 AM Re: Ban Downriggers? [Re: BillSteve]
NickD90 Offline
Shooting Instructor for hire

Registered: 10/26/10
Posts: 7260
Loc: Snohomish, WA
No. No more concessions. Either shut it totally down for all user groups or screw right off. I'm not going to voluntarily handicap myself with my single line when the groups next to us use gill nets and also makes deals behind closed doors.

The day I stop using DR's will happen to be the exact same day that tribes pick up spears and dip nets. After all, it's my usual and accustomed way to catch fish and my heritage to do so. My people invented the DR and it's a part of my culture. We already lost the poker chip through cultural appropriation.

Turnabout is fair play no?
_________________________
“If the military were fighting for our freedom, they would be storming Capitol Hill”. – FleaFlickr02

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#983031 - 12/31/17 09:06 AM Re: Ban Downriggers? [Re: BillSteve]
FleaFlickr02 Offline
River Nutrients

Registered: 10/28/09
Posts: 3314
Good one, Nick! Usual and accustomed... Might even fly in court!

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#983032 - 12/31/17 09:12 AM Re: Ban Downriggers? [Re: NickD90]
ReefSkunk
Unregistered


Originally Posted By: NickD90
I'm not going to voluntarily handicap myself




You’re already there, dude. No downriggers, that would only cut into your napping time.

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#983034 - 12/31/17 09:39 AM Re: Ban Downriggers? [Re: BillSteve]
stonefish Offline
King of the Beach

Registered: 12/11/02
Posts: 5206
Loc: Carkeek Park
I only beach fish Puget Sound, but I thought the shore only fishing requirement this past summer was total BS.
Letting downriggers get outlawed is just another step to more restrictions on non tribal anglers.
SF
_________________________
Go Dawgs!
Founding Member - 2023 Pink Plague Opposition Party
#coholivesmatter

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#983035 - 12/31/17 09:40 AM Re: Ban Downriggers? [Re: BillSteve]
NickD90 Offline
Shooting Instructor for hire

Registered: 10/26/10
Posts: 7260
Loc: Snohomish, WA
No worries Jake - I have it covered. I tie a little bell to my DR so I can fish and sleep at the same time ya smartass. I always seem to find my fish and stay well rested. grin

To be clear, I'm not anti-tribe at all. I'm anti-unfairness. 50/50 is 50/50. It's the law. Don't like a law? Vote to change it. Gill nets kill everything. A single hook and line can be selective with proper landing and release skills. If anything, the tribes should be moving towards how we do it. Hook and line only. Tribes have already appropriated outboards and nylon, so they can show us what real stewards & sportsmen they all are by moving over to a less deadly means of responsible harvest.

I have real concerns, when we as a user group, starting thinking up ways to further hinder ourselves when the folks next to us are fishing non-selective walls of death. It's insanity to voluntarily give an inch IMO.
_________________________
“If the military were fighting for our freedom, they would be storming Capitol Hill”. – FleaFlickr02

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#983038 - 12/31/17 10:22 AM Re: Ban Downriggers? [Re: BillSteve]
Larry B Offline
River Nutrients

Registered: 10/22/09
Posts: 3020
Loc: University Place and Whidbey I...
Interesting that this hot potato was thrown out by the OP on his first post. Agenda??

Now, back to something seemingly presented as fact....but isn't. A downrigger is not only a tool for fishing deep (as in, for blackmouth) but is also a very effective way of keeping terminal gear in the zone when fishing for mature, returning Chinook higher in the water column as well as coho and even chum.

I truly enjoy daybreak on a cloudy, damp morning in October at Possession slow trolling a cut plug herring with a five ounce lead for late coho. If you can't visualize that anticipation as you work along a rip then you've missed the whole salt water experience.

But when mid-day comes those fish commonly drop down to 100 feet or deeper where the downrigger allows use of a flasher and lure. Now, just try that with 16 ounces of lead. Yup, back to the Point Defiance meat line set up of several pounds of lead on a stubby broomstick of a rod and wire line - sure sounds like fun (not).
_________________________
Remember to immediately record your catch or you may become the catch!

It's the person who has done nothing who is sure nothing can be done. (Ewing)

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#983039 - 12/31/17 10:27 AM Re: Ban Downriggers? [Re: NickD90]
Tug 3 Offline
Returning Adult

Registered: 03/06/14
Posts: 264
Loc: Tumwater
If one method were to be banned, it probably should be mooching. I don't endorse this, but in mooching salmon can tend to take the bait deeper into their mouth, whereas trolling with lures on downriggers, they don't. It would further minimize injuries to the released salmon but hard to quantify. If we banned bait for salmon in saltwater, a lot more baitfish would be allowed to provide natural food for the endangered species. I'm only chiming in with my two cents worth here, not suggesting it. The charter fleet would be harmed with a bait ban.

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#983042 - 12/31/17 10:32 AM Re: Ban Downriggers? [Re: BillSteve]
Carcassman Offline
River Nutrients

Registered: 11/21/07
Posts: 7428
Loc: Olema,California,Planet Earth
Even if WDFW actually tries to achieve 50:50 that is for the whole catch. If a downriver takes 5 days to get the share and mooching 10 or 20 what does it matter if the share is caught? A fish taken on a downriver, or by mooching, or by plunking, or with a swung fly it is still dead and counts in the catch accounting.

The share is not to an individual fishery, like sports get 50 and the nest get 50. I have seen DFO try to divide up sockeye among inside and outside trollers, two different purse seine groups, and three different sets of gillnettters. Not pretty, especially when the targets were to the fourth decimal point.

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#983043 - 12/31/17 10:37 AM Re: Ban Downriggers? [Re: BillSteve]
Smalma Offline
River Nutrients

Registered: 11/25/01
Posts: 2844
Loc: Marysville
I remember that 20 or so years ago for a couple summers the fishing in MA 10 was limited to weights of no more than 2 ounces. As CM said those of us that adapted to the mooching game did quite well. An interesting side observation was that it seemed that we caught fewer shakers with a high percentage of the Chinook in the top 75 feet of the water column being migrating adults than when we were dragging the bottom.

Just an observation; the most constraining ESA listed Chinook stocks would not likely benefit significantly with a complete fishing closure. Those populations even with conservation hatchery programs are limited by habitat conditions (mostly freshwater). The one thing we have learned in the 20 years that Puget Sound Chinook has been ESA listed is that we as a society are not likely to restrict our activities (ability to make money) to benefit those fish. This of course that restrictive situation we currently find ourselves is likely to continue into the future. Having a discussion about how best use the available impacts in mixed stock recreational fishery seems appropriate.

One thing about limiting the effectiveness of those fishing mixed stock areas would benefit those anglers fishing many of the terminal areas and rivers where less constraining stocks are returning.

Curt

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#983044 - 12/31/17 10:38 AM Re: Ban Downriggers? [Re: BillSteve]
DrifterWA Offline
River Nutrients

Registered: 04/25/00
Posts: 5077
Loc: East of Aberdeen, West of Mont...

Just to stir the pot:

Keep downriggers but ban all electronic fish locating, finders, get back to the day when fishermen, were fishermen !!!!!

I do not use any downriggers in my fishing. I do use a Hummingbird 597 ci hd di but 99.9% of use is for water depth, boat speed, and water temperature, way over kill for what I use it for.

No electronics would sure change the charter boat fishery......hehehehe

Happy New Year, to all !!!!!!

Go Hawks!!!!!!!!
_________________________
"Worse day sport fishing, still better than the best day working"

"I thought growing older, would take longer"

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#983046 - 12/31/17 10:45 AM Re: Ban Downriggers? [Re: BillSteve]
CedarR Offline
Repeat Spawner

Registered: 08/04/99
Posts: 1463
Loc: Olympia, WA
What's lacking here is a "buy back" proposal.

Bring your downrigger, working or not, cable or braid, manual or electric to any WDFW boat ramp and you will receive a Discover pass, a 2018 Women in Waders calendar, an autographed picture of Jay Inslee, and a hole-punched deck of used casino cards.

While supplies last!

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#983047 - 12/31/17 10:45 AM Re: Ban Downriggers? [Re: Larry B]
BillSteve Offline
Fry

Registered: 10/25/17
Posts: 26
Loc: Port Ludlow, WA
My only agenda is to join the discussion about how to continue doing something I love that is obviously waning and has management issues (that at least we can all agree?). I was not suggesting making concessions regarding quotas re: recs vs coms vs tribes. Just wondering if there were some ideas recs could practically self impose to draw out the seasons a bit longer. Kind of like fly only or no live bait on rivers. I'm sure there are plenty of other ideas I hadn't thought of...

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#983049 - 12/31/17 10:52 AM Re: Ban Downriggers? [Re: BillSteve]
BARCHASER Offline
Juvenile at Sea

Registered: 04/22/12
Posts: 186
Loc: Bothell
I don't agree with this downrigger idea. Sport fishing is a lifestyle and the word lifestyle is just another word for the word "habit". Downriggers make the fishing easier and more productive, thus enhancing the lifestyle.

When a particular lifestyle gradually turns into just a big hassle, guess what, it dies!

Sport salmon fishing in Putrid Sound with all of its rules, closures, constant threats, restricted seasons and all the rest has become just a big hassle. Lots of guys have just given up on it in treaty waters. That's the goal of the WDFW and the Tribes, they want us off the water. No downriggers would be just another nail in the coffin!

Why not just close the whole mess, and end it. Better than this drip, drip, drip water torture.

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#983050 - 12/31/17 10:53 AM Re: Ban Downriggers? [Re: BillSteve]
Salmo g. Offline
River Nutrients

Registered: 03/08/99
Posts: 13523
I presume the main reason anglers use downriggers and electronic depth/fish finders is because salmon have become relatively scarce, making it more difficult and time consuming to catch one. It's hard for me to realize that during the early years of Puget Sound salmon fishing, most recreational angling was done with skiffs - with oars, not outboard motors - and mooching gear. There were many dozens of boathouses that rented the skiffs, so the Sound was covered with hundreds, if not thousands of small salmon fishing boats. And they caught salmon. Because salmon were abundant.

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